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Adaptive Approaches to Biosecurity Governance

Publication Type  Journal Article
Year of Publication  2010
Authors  Cook, D.C.; Liu, S.; Murphy, B.; Lonsdale, W.M.
Journal Title  Risk Analysis
Volume  30
Issue  9
Pages  1303-1314

The 10th International Working Conference on Stored Product Protection (IWCSPP) was held in Estoril, Portugal, from 27 June to 2 July 2010.

TRAVEL DETAILS

Researcher
NAYAKM
When: June 2010 - July 2010
Location:
Summary:

Dr Manoj Nayak represented the CRCNPB at the 10th International Working Conference on Stored Product Protection (IWCSPP) - which was held in Estoril, Portugal - where he delivered an oral presentation titled ‘Developing strategies to manage highly phosphine resistant populations of flat grain beetles in large bulk storages’.

LOCATION

Risk is divided into two categories: likelihood of an event occurring and the consequence once the event has occurred. In biosecurity, the likelihood of an event (i.e. a species invading Australia) can be further divided into the likelihood of arrival, establishment and spread with entry (arrival) and establishment being the two key components. CRC10001 has been using artificial neural networks (i.e. Self Organising Maps – SOMs) to estimate likelihood of establishment. However, this only addresses only one half of the entry/establishment likelihood equation.

The second half is the likelihood of entry and in an increasingly connected world, trade and trade paths are increasing exponentially. Ships that arrive into Australia may have visited multiple ports before arriving. These complex pathways present opportunities for pests and pathogens to arrive at Australia from indirect routes. For example, the Khapra beetle incursion in Western Australia in which this beetle was found in the personal effects of a family emigrating from Scotland. These personal effects had become contaminated when transferred into a shipping container that had originated in Pakistan. This highlights the fact that simply monitoring those pathways that directly link Australia to countries in which a pest or disease is found may not significantly reduce the likelihood of an incident.

Research outcomes:

Models developed in this project, which enable the analysis of complex shipping networks, provide a significant step forward in the risk profiling of incoming ships to Australian ports. These models enable the identification of pathways of greatest threat from invasive species as well as those Australian ports most likely to receive these invasive species.

Research implications:

These models could be incorporated into the current inspection protocols and enable further refinement and prioritisations for these procedures.

Acknowledgements:

Simon Barry, Peter Caley, Paul De Barro, Tom Harwood, Greg Hood, Rieks Van Klinken, Denys Yemshanov.

PROJECT LEADER


Dr Dean Paini
Project Leader CRC10161: Six degrees of preparation

dean.paini@csiro.au
Phone: 02 6246 4178
Fax: 02 6246 4000

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PROJECT DETAILS

Status
Complete
Term
February 2010 – February 2011
Budget
$267,780

PROGRAM DETAILS

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CORE CRC PARTICIPANTS

The 10th International Working Conference on Stored Product Protection was held in Estoril, Portugal from 27 June to 2 July 2010, under the auspices of the Instituto de Investigação C

TRAVEL DETAILS

Researcher
EMERYR
When: June 2010 - July 2010
Location: Estoril, Portugal
Summary:

Mr Robert Emery attended the International Working Conference on Stored Product Protection where he gave a presentation on the development of pest surveillance data collection software and hardware.

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Farmers dedicated to plant biosecurity

Lachlan Dobson recently won the inaugural Biosecurity Farmer of the Year Award.

Global Biosecurity 2010: safeguarding agriculture and the environment conference handbook

Publication Type  Conference Proceedings
Year of Publication  2010
Authors  Various,
Conference Name  Global Biosecurity 2010: safeguarding agriculture and the environment
Conference Start Date  28/02/2010
Conference Location  Brisbane, Australia